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Improve swap file performance |

Software KB
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kb# SW00003 |
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A swap
file is used by your computer to supplement the PC's memory. The
operating system copies as much data as possible into main memory and
leaves the rest on the swap file, a cache of data on your hard drive.
When the computer runs out of memory, it uses a swap file. The swap file
came in handy during the days when 32MB of RAM was standard. Today, most
computers comes with at least 64MB of RAM, and systems with 128MB or
256MB are common. For use on systems with more than 128MB RAM, the hard
disk-based swap file is not needed as much. Using a swap file means your
hard drive is in use, which is slower than accessing data in memory. If
you minimize the use of the swap file, you'll see a small performance
gain -- not a drastic improvement, but a slight improvement. If you have
more than 128 megabytes of memory, there's really no reason to rely on a
swap file. When you have lots of RAM, you can optimize the use of your
swap file. This procedure optimizes use of the swap file in Windows 98.
Open Notepad or any text editor. Click on the File menu, and select
Open. At the bottom, toggle the pull-down menu labeled "Files of
type:" to All Files (*.*). Look in the C:\WINDOWS directory for a
file called system.ini. If you can't find the file, you may need to
activate a feature that will let you see hidden files. To do this: Click
on the Start menu, point to Settings, and select Folder Options. Click
on the View tab and select Show All Files Under Hidden Files. Scroll
down until you find the heading [386Enh], and add the following line or
modify it, if it already exists. ConservativeSwapFileUsage=1 Restart
Windows. |
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This page was last modified on
03/02/08
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